Contents

This page describes how the various parameters and texture data used to define a material in Second Life are interpreted for rendering. It is intended to help content creators and external tool developers to better understand how to create images to achieve good visual results.

There are as many as two colors and three images associated with a face.
For a more detailed explanation of the fundamentals of materials, see Pedro Toledo's Brief Considerations About Materials

Note:Setting any of the materials properties on an object causes its Land Impact to be calculated using the current algorithm.

The additional textures used for Normal and Specular maps add to the Download Weight of the object.

If the object was previously using the legacy accounting (prim count), setting a material property on it may increase costs significantly due to other properties (such as complex shapes) that are more accurately accounted for in the current system.

Colors

this is a color that ‘tints’ any reflections from the face; see also Specular Map

Textures

Texture

Also called the Diffuse Map, this is an image that is displayed on the surface. The way the texture is applied to the face is controlled by

Positioning & Scaling Properties

Note that each image (diffuse/texture, normal map, specular map) has its own values for these parameters.

Mapping

Default or Planar

Horizontal Repeats

number of repeats of the image over the surface (used only in default mapping)

Vertical Repeats

number of repeats of the image over the surface (used only in default mapping)

Rotation

clockwise degrees the image is rotated

Repeats Per Meter

number of repeats of the image per in-world meter of the surface (used only in planar mapping)

Horizontal Offset

distance in meters the image is shifted right on the surface

Vertical Offset

distance in meters the image is shifted up on the surface

Normal Map

An image whose color data encodes changes to the "normal" for each pixel on the surface. The normal is the direction that the pixel "faces" for the purpose of determining how it is illuminated by and reflects light sources (imagine that each pixel is turned on tiny pivots). The alpha channel of the Normal Map may contain a specular exponent value that is mutilplied by the "Glossiness" parameter. A higher alpha value will result in specular highlights that are brighter and tighter. Keep in mind these are OpenGL style normal maps, where bright green is up and bright red is right. (or to put in Industry terms, the normal maps are X+, Y+, Z+ normal maps)

Specular Map

This encodes the color of the light reflected by each pixel on the surface. See the Texture Channel Encoding table below.

The Alpha channel value of the Specular Map encodes the environment intensity. A lower value in the alpha channel will diminish the impact of the environment map reflections on the surface of the object.

The value (0...255) is compared to the Alpha Cutoff parameter (below); if the pixel is greater than the cutoff, it is fully opaque; if not, it is fully transparent.

Emissive

The value is used to encode how brightly the pixel appears in the absence of light (ambiance): 0 = no additional ambiance (default); 255 = full brightness

Note that using any alpha mode other than Transparency may cause problems when rendered with viewers that do not yet support materials because they will be rendered as blended transparency. We expect that support for materials will be adopted quickly in most viewers, so this is acceptable.

Alpha Cutoff

Used only when Alpha Mode is Alpha Mask (see description of that mode above)

Specular Light Color

Tints the light reflected from the object; this value is combined with any value from the color for the pixel as specified in the Specular Map, if any.

Environment Intensity

Modulates the intensity of the environment on the surface as a whole.

Glossiness

This controls the “glossiness”, or the roughness, of the reflected light on a surface. The lower this value is, the “rougher” the light reflectance is, while the higher the value the “sharper” the light reflectance is. When the normal map’s alpha channel is present, the specular exponent map contained in it is modulated by this parameter.